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The Somali Muslim cop who killed Justine Damond will likely get away with what many are calling murder.

Mohamed Noor, the rookie Minneapolis police officer who shot and killed the unarmed Australian woman, still refuses to be interviewed by state investigators.

Only the Minneapolis PD’s Internal Affairs unit can compel him to talk, but even then, any statement he provides cannot be used in a criminal case due to a legal technicality in Minnesota.

Under that law, any information Noor provides, and any evidence resulting from that information cannot be used against him in a criminal proceeding.

Noor, who has three complaints against in his two years on the force, shot the 40-year-old bride-to-be as she approached the drivers side of his patrol car at 11:30 p.m. in her pajamas to report a possible assault in an alley near her home.

Noor’s partner, Matthew Harrity, who was behind the wheel of the police car, said he was shocked when Noor leaned across him and opened fire.

Because Noor is a Somali in the largest Somali community in the U.S. — an area of Minneapolis is called “Little Mogadishu” — he is getting preferred treatment from hijab mayor Betsy Hodges.

Trying to incriminate Justine

As Justine’s heartbroken family desperately seek answers to the shooting, investigators with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension even searched Justine’s house in an effort to find some evidence that could switch the focus to her instead of Noor, an action that stunned criminal law experts.

“I don’t understand what they’re looking for inside her home,” said Joseph Daly, an emeritus professor at Mitchell Hamline School of Law. “Is she a suspect? When I read that search warrant, I cannot find probable cause to search her home.”

Investigators found nothing incriminating in Justine’s home.

Meanwhile, more than two weeks after the senseless killing, Justine’s family, and the Australian government, and many people around the world are despairing that justice will never be done and that the Somali cop will get away with gunning down the innocent woman.

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Minneapolis mayor more concerned about Somali community than getting justice for Justine

A week after Australian Justine Damond was gunned down in cold blood by Somali Muslim cop Mohamed Noor, the killer cop still refuses to give a statement.

And as Justine’s heart-broken family desperately seek answers to the nightmare, hijab mayor Betsy Hodges is telling her Somali-Muslim friends how to file hate crimes.

Here’s part of an open letter she posted online:

To the Somali community: I want you to know that you are a valued and appreciated part of Minneapolis. I stand with you and support you. The strength and beauty of the Somali and East African communities are a vital part of what makes Minneapolis so strong and beautiful. I am grateful to be your neighbor. This week a Somali police officer, Officer Mohamed Noor, shot and killed a woman under circumstances we don’t yet comprehend. Justine Damond’s death is a tragedy for our city. We cannot compound that tragedy by turning to racism, xenophobia, and Islamophobia. It is unjust and ridiculous to assert that an entire community be held responsible for the actions of one person. That will not be tolerated in Minneapolis. If you are experiencing discrimination, you can file a complaint at http://www.minneapolismn.gov/civil…/discrimination-complaint

Mayor Hodges, circled in back row, as her Somali friends give the forefinger salute used by Muslims signifying that there is but one god, Allah.

Hodges is so in love with her Somali community — the largest in America — that she posted her election video in Arabic:

Will continue to hire Somali cops first

She made the police department changes at a time when more than 22 young men from the community had left the state to join al-Shabab in Somalia. Another dozen people have left in recent years to join the jihad in Syria, including the Islamic State group.

In November, nine men were sentenced on terror charges for plotting unsuccessfully to join the group and fight in Syria.

A 20-year-old Somali-American went on a stabbing rampage at a shopping mall in St. Cloud, Minn., last September, wounding 10 people before an off-duty police officer fatally shot him.

Hodges, a Democrat, will seek reelection in November.

Fast-track training got Noor on the police force

Noor, 31, graduated in 2015 from the city’s accelerated police cadet program. The seven-month training is a faster nontraditional route to becoming a policeman.

The Minneapolis program covers tuition at Hennepin Technical College and pays trainees $20-an-hour, with benefits, That salary increases after they get licensed.

After gunning down an unarmed woman who had made a 911 call, Noor’s experience and training are now in question.

Additionally, on the night of the shooting, he was in the patrol car with officer Matthew Harrity, who had been a cop for about one year.

Not everyone is sold on the fast-track training. In Minnesota, the more traditional route to a job as a peace officer includes a two- or four-year degree in criminal justice or a related field.

James Densley, who teaches criminal justice at Metropolitan State University, said he thinks the cadet programs leave students with “a limited view of the profession.”

Critics nationwide say the cadet programs come up short in instructing common sense approaches to slowing down confrontations and defusing hostile situations.